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The LOYOLA MAROON Vol. XXXV Loyola University, New Orleans, La., Friday, May 2, 1958 No. 22 Seven Assume Presidential Posts Seven Loyolans were elected to the post of president in the various schools and colleges in campus elections held Monday and Tuesday. Presidents elected are Jerry Hoskins, arts and sciences; Bob McLaughlin, business administration; Ronald Haydel, pharmacy; Peter Butler, law; Rosemary Hoppe, music; Frank DePaula, dentistry; and Harold Legendre, evening division. Junior representatives from A&S are Carolyn Brandt, Charles Hannemann, Malcolm Schwarzenbach, Camille Tamborello, and Bob Wilkie. Larry Henneberger and Lynnette Hubert were elected as junior representatives from BA. Pharmacy chose Paul Rozas and Sal Alphonse as representatives. Representatives from law are Armand Brinkhaus and Gaspar Schiro. Music representatives are Kathleen Tonry and Sigrid Boulmay. Dentistry representatives are Don McSpadden and Herbert Gentry. Representing the evening division will be Harold Dearie and Anthony Enterante. Sophomore representatives from A&S are Pat Born, Maria Cicero, Bill Hammel, Danny Matthews and Dave Wessel. Sophomore representatives from BA are Gerard Hansen and Thomas McGoey. The president of the student council is to be chosen from the presidents of the various colleges at the May 19 meeting. All other officers, vice president, secretary, treasurer and parliamentarian, can be chosen from any member of the council. Elections in A&S and BA were highly organized, working under the new rules governing council elections. The acquisition of voting machines proved to be an impediment to the speed of voting but they greatly speeded the counting of ballots, Ed Peace, student council president, said. The race in BA for president ran very close with only six votes difference between the candidates. In the other schools and colleges the margin of victory was wider. The outgoing council held it's last business meeting Tuesday and will hold its banquet Tuesday night at Delmonico's Restaurant. "WHY CAN'T I VOTE?" five-year-old DANNY HILBERT asks poll commiuioner GASPER SCHIRO as he attempts to cast his ballot in the student council elections. Judging by the results, DANNY's vigorous campaigning for HOSKINS was very effective. Forum To Feature Priest-Explorer The Rev. Daniel Linehan, S.J., Antarctic priest-explorer will speak on the final Loyola Forum Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. in the St. Charles Hotel, the Rev. John A. Toomey, S.J., director, announced. A member of "Operation Deep Freeze," the expedition which explored regions near the South Pole, Father Linehan will speak on the Anarctic and his explorations. While a member of "Operation Deep Freeze," under Rear Admiral George J. Dufek, Father Linehan was credited with making the major scientific finding that there is rock above sea level at the Pole. A seismologist and professor of geophysics at Boston College, Father Linehan made this discovery by setting off three blasts of TNT in a 48 foot crater. His discovery solved the long speculated problem as to what lies beneath the ice-covered surface of the South Pole. Betide* being an important contribution to man'* knowledge of Anarctica, a land discovered in the early 1800's but still only partially explored, Father Linehan's discovery also determined the practicality of constructing air fields at the Pole. Anarctica is ranked as the fifth largest continent. It covers more than 6,000,000 sq. miles, nearly twice the area of the U. S. It has enough ice to cover the entire world under a 100 foot glacier. Tickets for Father Linehan's speech are on sale at the book store, Petetin's, Jesuit Church on Baronne St., and the Catholic Book Store. Students will be admitted free upon presentation of student-identification cards. FATHER LINEHAN Labbe Elected To Top Post In Law Club Ronald Labbe, law senior, has been elected president of the St. Thomas More Law Club. He succeeds Gerald Choppin. Other officers elected are vice president, Haul Rutledge, junior; secretary, Lolis Elie, junior; and treasurer, Larry Rotan, freshman. Nine new members have been accepted into the club. They are William Oberhelman, Lawrence Fontan, John Prenkel, Robert Menard, Robert Troyer, John Molassion, Frans Labranche, all freshmen, and Ronald Chevis and Thomas Nelson, juniors. New members and officers will be installed at the club a annual banquet Sunday, Choppin said. Dean Antonio Papale of the law school will act as chef to the club's members and the law faculty will cook a spaghetti dinner. "We are reviving the tradition of having the dean cook our supper," Choppin said. Sodalities Sponsor May Mass All students are urged to attend the May Mass scheduled for noon Tuesday in Holy Name of Jesus Church. Sponsored by the Sodality Union, the Mass is a university - wide function. All noon classes will be cancelled at that time to permit the entire student body to attend. Members of the music school will sing hymns during Mass. Houma Editor To Address Staff At Maroon Banquet John B. Gordon, editor and publisher of The Houma Courier and Terrebonne Press will be principal speaker at the annual Maroon banquet, May 10 at 8 p.m. at Frank's Steak House. A native of Oklahoma City, Okla., Gordon took over the Courrier 21 years ago and the Press five years ago. The Courier received the 1957 Community Service Award from the Louisiana Press Association and placed first in general excellence. The Press took second place. The Teche editor-publisher is a journalism graduate of the University of Oklahoma, and before coming to Louisiana was co-publisher of the Texas City Sun and advertising manager of the Cushing Daily Citi*en in Oklahoma. He is past-president of the Louisiana Press Association and has served as chairman of the editorial page committee of the National Editorial Association. The annual McEnerny Award of a gold watch to the outstanding journalist from the department will be presented at the banquet, Mr. Edwin P. Fricke, chairman of the department of journalism, said. The McEnerny Award U presented annually by Mr. Henry J. McEnerny Jr., New Orleans attorney, in honor of hi* late father. The presentation will be made by the Rev. Robert L. Boggs, S.J., dean of students. Two awards recently instituted at Loyola by the Boswell Institute will be presented by Dr. Brendan F. Brown, professor of law and chancellor of the New Orleans division of the Institute. The plaque awards will be presented for outstanding reportorial and creative work on The Maroon this past year. Four gold keys will be presented to outstanding staff members. Recently elected honorary, alumni and faculty members of The Thirty Club, campus honorary journalism society, will be inducted at a cocktail party prior to the banquet. Eleven A&S Seniors Selected By Honorary Scholastic Group DBS Slates Induction At Banquet Muy 20 Eleven arts and sciences seniors have been selected for membership to Delta Epsilon Sigma, national Catholic honorary scholastic society . The new honorees will be formally inducted at the society's annual banquet at 7:30 - ~~~ p.m., May 20, at Delmonico's restaurant.Announcement of the new members, chosen on the basis of a "B" average or better, character, academic intent, Catholic interest, leadership and co-operation, was made by Mrs. George Parham, president of the group and 1951 medical technology graduate. Students selected were Edward Pesce, George Guilbault, Robert Gerald Miller, Loretta H. Logan, Michael S. Medawar, Donald E. Nicodemus, Joel Marie Larkin, Mary Catherine Arnold, Suzanne Coco, Leo R. Mc- Lean and the Rev. Gabriel Angelle.Leo C. Zinser, chairman of Loyola's speech department, dramatics director and education director of WWL-TV and radio, will be principal speaker at the induction banquet. The new members, who will be inducted by Mrs. Parham, will recite the provisional ritual of the society adopted at a national convention of the group at Atlantic City. Official membership diplomas and gold keys will be presented to the honorees after induction ceremonies. Officer! for the 1958-59 school year will also be announced at the banquet. The new members were selected by the society at a closed meeting on recommendations of the various arts and sciences departmental chairmen. Ten per cent of the arts and sciences graduating class are selected by the group each year. Functions af the society include two speaker-meetings a year. NEW MEMBERS of Delta Epsilon Sigma, national honorary Catholic scholastic society, are from left to right, bottom row: DONALD NICODEMUS, EDWARD PESCE, and LEO McLEAN; middle: SUE COCO, JOEL LARKIN, MARY ARNOLD, and LORETTA LOGAN; top: MICHAEL MEDAWAR, GEORGE GUILBAULT, and the REV. GABRIEL ANGELLE. Mining from the picture is ROBERT MILLER. They were chosen from the top ten per cent of the A&S senior class. Maunoir New Prexy Of Propeller Club Peter Maunoir, BA junior, was elected president of the Propeller Club at last Thursday's meeting. He succeeds Carl Delcambre, BA senior. Other officers were: Tommy Hendricks, vice president; Letty Hubert, secretary, and Lee Todd, secretary. THE REV. MARTIN CYRIL D'ARCY, S.J., will address the Philosophy Club Sunday at 8 p.m. in Marquette Auditorium. "Pangs and Pleasures of Existing" will be his topic. (See story, page 6) Section Of Physics Society Slates '59 Convention Here The Southeastern Section of the American Physical Society has accepted an invitation to hold its 1959 annual convention at Loyola, The Rev. F. A. Benedetto, S.J., chairman of the physics department, said. Recently returned from the 1958 convention at Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Ala., Father Benedetto said that the southeastern section takes in states from Kentucky to Louisiana. This will be the first meeting of the society in this state. Membership for the Dociety is approximately 600 and tome 250 member* will probably attend the Loyola meeting. This year's convention included a series of illustrated lectures by Dr. Werner von Braun, director of the Army's missle development at Redstone, and his associates describing the problems and mechanisms of our present satellite. Redstone Arsenal is the birthplace of the Army's Jupiter C missle, a combination of the Jupiter and Redstone solid fuel missies, which successfully launched the first U.S. satellite last November. Final Concert Slated Sunday The final program in a series of three Sunday Twilight Pop Concerts by the University Concert Band, under the direction of George Jansen, will be held Sunday at 4 p.m. at City Park Casino. Soloists will include, James Assenheimer, clarinet; Alcee Meric, alto sax; Harriet Wallack, flute; and Bert Braud, clarinet. The public is cordially invited to attend and admission is free. Vince Manguno Wins Summer In Mexico City Vincent Manguno, A&S sophomore has been awarded a scholarship to the Universidad Ibereamericano, a Jesuit university in Mexico City, the Rev. Bernard Tonnar, assistant dean of faculties, announced. The scholarship was awarded to the 20-year-old English major, who holds a 2.8 average, because of academic achievement. A Spanish minor, Vince said that he will take courses in upper division Spanish dealing chiefly with Spanish literature during his three months at the university. A graduate of Jesuit High School where he studied Spanish for two years, he attends Loyola on a Breaux scholarship. A member of the St. Thomas Aquinas Sodality and the rifle team, he was also rice president of his freshman class. Vince said that while he is in Mexico City, he hopes to learn conversational Spanish and the customs of the Latin American people. VINCENT MANGUNO

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The LOYOLA MAROON Vol. XXXV Loyola University, New Orleans, La., Friday, May 2, 1958 No. 22 Seven Assume Presidential Posts Seven Loyolans were elected to the post of president in the various schools and colleges in campus elections held Monday and Tuesday. Presidents elected are Jerry Hoskins, arts and sciences; Bob McLaughlin, business administration; Ronald Haydel, pharmacy; Peter Butler, law; Rosemary Hoppe, music; Frank DePaula, dentistry; and Harold Legendre, evening division. Junior representatives from A&S are Carolyn Brandt, Charles Hannemann, Malcolm Schwarzenbach, Camille Tamborello, and Bob Wilkie. Larry Henneberger and Lynnette Hubert were elected as junior representatives from BA. Pharmacy chose Paul Rozas and Sal Alphonse as representatives. Representatives from law are Armand Brinkhaus and Gaspar Schiro. Music representatives are Kathleen Tonry and Sigrid Boulmay. Dentistry representatives are Don McSpadden and Herbert Gentry. Representing the evening division will be Harold Dearie and Anthony Enterante. Sophomore representatives from A&S are Pat Born, Maria Cicero, Bill Hammel, Danny Matthews and Dave Wessel. Sophomore representatives from BA are Gerard Hansen and Thomas McGoey. The president of the student council is to be chosen from the presidents of the various colleges at the May 19 meeting. All other officers, vice president, secretary, treasurer and parliamentarian, can be chosen from any member of the council. Elections in A&S and BA were highly organized, working under the new rules governing council elections. The acquisition of voting machines proved to be an impediment to the speed of voting but they greatly speeded the counting of ballots, Ed Peace, student council president, said. The race in BA for president ran very close with only six votes difference between the candidates. In the other schools and colleges the margin of victory was wider. The outgoing council held it's last business meeting Tuesday and will hold its banquet Tuesday night at Delmonico's Restaurant. "WHY CAN'T I VOTE?" five-year-old DANNY HILBERT asks poll commiuioner GASPER SCHIRO as he attempts to cast his ballot in the student council elections. Judging by the results, DANNY's vigorous campaigning for HOSKINS was very effective. Forum To Feature Priest-Explorer The Rev. Daniel Linehan, S.J., Antarctic priest-explorer will speak on the final Loyola Forum Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. in the St. Charles Hotel, the Rev. John A. Toomey, S.J., director, announced. A member of "Operation Deep Freeze," the expedition which explored regions near the South Pole, Father Linehan will speak on the Anarctic and his explorations. While a member of "Operation Deep Freeze," under Rear Admiral George J. Dufek, Father Linehan was credited with making the major scientific finding that there is rock above sea level at the Pole. A seismologist and professor of geophysics at Boston College, Father Linehan made this discovery by setting off three blasts of TNT in a 48 foot crater. His discovery solved the long speculated problem as to what lies beneath the ice-covered surface of the South Pole. Betide* being an important contribution to man'* knowledge of Anarctica, a land discovered in the early 1800's but still only partially explored, Father Linehan's discovery also determined the practicality of constructing air fields at the Pole. Anarctica is ranked as the fifth largest continent. It covers more than 6,000,000 sq. miles, nearly twice the area of the U. S. It has enough ice to cover the entire world under a 100 foot glacier. Tickets for Father Linehan's speech are on sale at the book store, Petetin's, Jesuit Church on Baronne St., and the Catholic Book Store. Students will be admitted free upon presentation of student-identification cards. FATHER LINEHAN Labbe Elected To Top Post In Law Club Ronald Labbe, law senior, has been elected president of the St. Thomas More Law Club. He succeeds Gerald Choppin. Other officers elected are vice president, Haul Rutledge, junior; secretary, Lolis Elie, junior; and treasurer, Larry Rotan, freshman. Nine new members have been accepted into the club. They are William Oberhelman, Lawrence Fontan, John Prenkel, Robert Menard, Robert Troyer, John Molassion, Frans Labranche, all freshmen, and Ronald Chevis and Thomas Nelson, juniors. New members and officers will be installed at the club a annual banquet Sunday, Choppin said. Dean Antonio Papale of the law school will act as chef to the club's members and the law faculty will cook a spaghetti dinner. "We are reviving the tradition of having the dean cook our supper," Choppin said. Sodalities Sponsor May Mass All students are urged to attend the May Mass scheduled for noon Tuesday in Holy Name of Jesus Church. Sponsored by the Sodality Union, the Mass is a university - wide function. All noon classes will be cancelled at that time to permit the entire student body to attend. Members of the music school will sing hymns during Mass. Houma Editor To Address Staff At Maroon Banquet John B. Gordon, editor and publisher of The Houma Courier and Terrebonne Press will be principal speaker at the annual Maroon banquet, May 10 at 8 p.m. at Frank's Steak House. A native of Oklahoma City, Okla., Gordon took over the Courrier 21 years ago and the Press five years ago. The Courier received the 1957 Community Service Award from the Louisiana Press Association and placed first in general excellence. The Press took second place. The Teche editor-publisher is a journalism graduate of the University of Oklahoma, and before coming to Louisiana was co-publisher of the Texas City Sun and advertising manager of the Cushing Daily Citi*en in Oklahoma. He is past-president of the Louisiana Press Association and has served as chairman of the editorial page committee of the National Editorial Association. The annual McEnerny Award of a gold watch to the outstanding journalist from the department will be presented at the banquet, Mr. Edwin P. Fricke, chairman of the department of journalism, said. The McEnerny Award U presented annually by Mr. Henry J. McEnerny Jr., New Orleans attorney, in honor of hi* late father. The presentation will be made by the Rev. Robert L. Boggs, S.J., dean of students. Two awards recently instituted at Loyola by the Boswell Institute will be presented by Dr. Brendan F. Brown, professor of law and chancellor of the New Orleans division of the Institute. The plaque awards will be presented for outstanding reportorial and creative work on The Maroon this past year. Four gold keys will be presented to outstanding staff members. Recently elected honorary, alumni and faculty members of The Thirty Club, campus honorary journalism society, will be inducted at a cocktail party prior to the banquet. Eleven A&S Seniors Selected By Honorary Scholastic Group DBS Slates Induction At Banquet Muy 20 Eleven arts and sciences seniors have been selected for membership to Delta Epsilon Sigma, national Catholic honorary scholastic society . The new honorees will be formally inducted at the society's annual banquet at 7:30 - ~~~ p.m., May 20, at Delmonico's restaurant.Announcement of the new members, chosen on the basis of a "B" average or better, character, academic intent, Catholic interest, leadership and co-operation, was made by Mrs. George Parham, president of the group and 1951 medical technology graduate. Students selected were Edward Pesce, George Guilbault, Robert Gerald Miller, Loretta H. Logan, Michael S. Medawar, Donald E. Nicodemus, Joel Marie Larkin, Mary Catherine Arnold, Suzanne Coco, Leo R. Mc- Lean and the Rev. Gabriel Angelle.Leo C. Zinser, chairman of Loyola's speech department, dramatics director and education director of WWL-TV and radio, will be principal speaker at the induction banquet. The new members, who will be inducted by Mrs. Parham, will recite the provisional ritual of the society adopted at a national convention of the group at Atlantic City. Official membership diplomas and gold keys will be presented to the honorees after induction ceremonies. Officer! for the 1958-59 school year will also be announced at the banquet. The new members were selected by the society at a closed meeting on recommendations of the various arts and sciences departmental chairmen. Ten per cent of the arts and sciences graduating class are selected by the group each year. Functions af the society include two speaker-meetings a year. NEW MEMBERS of Delta Epsilon Sigma, national honorary Catholic scholastic society, are from left to right, bottom row: DONALD NICODEMUS, EDWARD PESCE, and LEO McLEAN; middle: SUE COCO, JOEL LARKIN, MARY ARNOLD, and LORETTA LOGAN; top: MICHAEL MEDAWAR, GEORGE GUILBAULT, and the REV. GABRIEL ANGELLE. Mining from the picture is ROBERT MILLER. They were chosen from the top ten per cent of the A&S senior class. Maunoir New Prexy Of Propeller Club Peter Maunoir, BA junior, was elected president of the Propeller Club at last Thursday's meeting. He succeeds Carl Delcambre, BA senior. Other officers were: Tommy Hendricks, vice president; Letty Hubert, secretary, and Lee Todd, secretary. THE REV. MARTIN CYRIL D'ARCY, S.J., will address the Philosophy Club Sunday at 8 p.m. in Marquette Auditorium. "Pangs and Pleasures of Existing" will be his topic. (See story, page 6) Section Of Physics Society Slates '59 Convention Here The Southeastern Section of the American Physical Society has accepted an invitation to hold its 1959 annual convention at Loyola, The Rev. F. A. Benedetto, S.J., chairman of the physics department, said. Recently returned from the 1958 convention at Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Ala., Father Benedetto said that the southeastern section takes in states from Kentucky to Louisiana. This will be the first meeting of the society in this state. Membership for the Dociety is approximately 600 and tome 250 member* will probably attend the Loyola meeting. This year's convention included a series of illustrated lectures by Dr. Werner von Braun, director of the Army's missle development at Redstone, and his associates describing the problems and mechanisms of our present satellite. Redstone Arsenal is the birthplace of the Army's Jupiter C missle, a combination of the Jupiter and Redstone solid fuel missies, which successfully launched the first U.S. satellite last November. Final Concert Slated Sunday The final program in a series of three Sunday Twilight Pop Concerts by the University Concert Band, under the direction of George Jansen, will be held Sunday at 4 p.m. at City Park Casino. Soloists will include, James Assenheimer, clarinet; Alcee Meric, alto sax; Harriet Wallack, flute; and Bert Braud, clarinet. The public is cordially invited to attend and admission is free. Vince Manguno Wins Summer In Mexico City Vincent Manguno, A&S sophomore has been awarded a scholarship to the Universidad Ibereamericano, a Jesuit university in Mexico City, the Rev. Bernard Tonnar, assistant dean of faculties, announced. The scholarship was awarded to the 20-year-old English major, who holds a 2.8 average, because of academic achievement. A Spanish minor, Vince said that he will take courses in upper division Spanish dealing chiefly with Spanish literature during his three months at the university. A graduate of Jesuit High School where he studied Spanish for two years, he attends Loyola on a Breaux scholarship. A member of the St. Thomas Aquinas Sodality and the rifle team, he was also rice president of his freshman class. Vince said that while he is in Mexico City, he hopes to learn conversational Spanish and the customs of the Latin American people. VINCENT MANGUNO